Phil 2301 Intro to Philosophy - Dallas Baptist University

Phil 2301 Intro to Philosophy

Arguments for God¡¯s Existence

Dr. Naugle

I. Arguments for the Existence of God

A. Two types of arguments for God¡¯s existence

1. A priori arguments

2. A posteriori arguments

B. Attitudes toward arguments for God¡¯s existence

1. Arguments are psychologically unconvincing: proof is convincing

only when people are already predisposed to believe.

2. Arguments are logically invalid: they all beg the question.

3. Arguments are epistemologically defective: the mind and our

knowledge construct reality (phenomena), but do not correspond to

ultimate reality or things in themselves (noumena).

4. Arguments are ontologically inadequate: what is rationally

inescapable may not necessarily be the ontologically real.

5. Arguments are axiologically misplaced: rational proofs are not of

prime importance in one's religious experience

II. A posteriori arguments for God's existence (arguments from experience)

A. Cosmological arguments: Beginning/Beginnner; Contingency/necessity

1. The Kalam Cosmological argument

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Everything that begins to exist has a cause of its existence.

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The universe began to exist (Big Bang Cosmology)

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Therefore, the universe has a cause of its existence.

2. Atemporal cosmological argument

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A contingent being exists.

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This contingent being has a cause or explanation of the its

existence

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The cause or explanation of its existence is something other

than the contingent being itself (if it were, it also would need

an explanation leading to infinite regress)

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What causes or explains the existence of this contingent

being must either be other contingent beings or a

noncontingent being (that is, a necessary being)

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Contingent beings alone cannot ultimately cause or explain

the existence of a contingent being.

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Therefore, what causes and explains the existence of this

contingent being must include a noncontingent, necessary

being

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Therefore, a necessary being (God) exists.

B. Teleological arguments: Design/Designer

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All design implies a designer.

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Great design implies a great designer.

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There is great design in the world (like that of a great machine;

human eye, male/female relation, DNA, etc.).

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Therefore, there must be a great Designer of the world, viz.,

God.

1. Analogical teleological argument (William Paley, 1743-1805)

a. A watch shows that it was put together for an intelligent

purpose to keep time.

a. It has a spring to give it motion.

b. It has a series of wheels to transmit this motion.

c. The wheels are made of brass so that they do not

rust.

d. The spring is made of steel because of the

resilience of the metal.

e. The front cover is of glass so that one can see

through it.

b. The world shows an even greater evidence of design than

a watch.

a. The world is a greater work of art than a watch.

b. The world has a more subtle and complex design

than a watch.

c. The world has an endless variety of means

adapted to ends.

c. Therefore, if a watch calls for the watch maker, then the

world demands an even greater intelligent Designer, viz.,

God.

2. Probabalistic teleological argument

a. Though Darwin argued that the order of the universe is

not the result of conscious activity (Mind/God), natural

selection cannot explain how natural elements gave rise

to life nor why these elements should give rise to living as

opposed to nonliving things.

b. The entire process of organic development invokes

information processing (information chains in RNA).

Michael Behe, Darwin¡¯s Black Box.

c. Natural selection is directionless, suggesting that only the

fit survive, but placing no requirements or direction on the

fit toward greater complexity which is obvious.

d. Anthropic arguments suggest a fine tuned universe as the

prerequisite for life.

C. Moral arguments: morality/Moral Law Giver

C. S. Lewis, Mere Christianity.

1. There must be a universal moral law or else¡ª

a.

b.

c.

d.

Disagreements would make no sense.

All criticisms are meaningless (e.g., the Nazis are wrong)

Promise and treaty keeping are unnecessary.

We would not make excuses for breaking the moral law.

2. This moral law cannot be just herd instinct or herd mentality.

3. This moral law cannot be simply convention.

4. This moral law cannot be identified with the law of nature.

5. This moral law cannot be mere fancy.

6. Man is the key to understanding this moral law because:

a. He knows that moral oughts (prescriptions-what I ought

to do) cannot simply be derived from what morally is

(descriptions-what is done).

b. The source of this moral law must be more like man

(mind) than nature (matter). Moral laws come from

minds, not matter.

c. The source of the moral law cannot merely be part of the

physical universe.

7. Therefore, there is an absolutely perfect power outside of

mankind which more like mind than anything we know:

a. It gives us moral commands.

b. It is very much interested in our behavior (in keeping the

commands it gives).

c. If it were not absolutely good, then all moral effort would

be futile in the long run.

d. This source of morality must be absolutely good (for the

standard for good cannot be less than good himself).

e. This kind of source for morality is God.

III. A priori Ontological arguments for God's Existence (arguments from the idea

of God alone)

¡ªSt. Anselm, the Archbishop of Canterbury (1033-1109)

A. The first argument:

1. God is by definition that than which nothing greater can be

conceived.

2. It is one thing to exist in the understanding and another thing to

exist both in the understanding and outside the understanding

(e.g., a painting existing only in the painter's mind and existing

on canvas, too).

3. It is greater to exist both in the understanding and outside the

understanding than in the understanding only.

4. Therefore, God must exist both in the understanding and

outside the understanding (in reality), for if He did not, then we

could conceive of One who did, which would be greater. But

God by definition is the greatest Being conceivable.

5. Hence, God must exist.

B. The second argument (Proslogion, chp. 3)

1. Statement one:

a. It is logically necessary to affirm of a necessary existent

what is logically necessary to the concept of it.

b. Real existence is logically necessary to the concept of a

necessary existent.

c. Hence, it is logically necessary to affirm that a necessary

existent exists.

2. Statement two:

a. If God exists, his existence is necessary.

b. If God does not exist, his existence is impossible.

c. Either God exists or God does not exist.

d. God's existence is either necessary or impossible.

e. God's existence is possible (not impossible).

[5b. God's existence is impossible (not possible)].

f. Therefore, God 's existence is necessary.

[6b. Therefore, God's does not exist.]

IV. St. Thomas Aquinas' "Five Ways" of proving God's existence

1. The first way: motion

2. The second way: cause

3. The third way: necessity

4. The fourth way: degree

5. The fifth way: design

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